#2: My FIL watches a reality television show where this guy from Alaska goes around and saves people who tried homesteading but are doing a horrible job at it

#1: I’ve seen commercials for that. It makes me want to laugh in Schadenfreude.

#2: He recounted one of the episodes with a TSTL* couple for us. It was a bit astonishing. They’d planned like Pa Ingalls, which his to say not at all. [*too stupid to live]

#1: I have spent enough time on a farm to know the daily slog is NOT for me. (I hope they get Lyme disease) [ed: not really]

#2: Even if they’d been doing everything perfectly, their land wasn’t big enough to homestead on, and they were not doing anything right. I don’t understand people who would want to homestead. It takes up so much space and it’s so much labor. Economies of scale! Comparative advantage! Efficiency! Gains from trade!

#1: I mean, you CAN build your own house but you should be some sort of engineer first. And some sort of agricultural specialist. And an herbalist. And a veterinarian. And, and, and….“Flush toilets exist but we’d rather play house in the backyard until we die of dysentery.”
Let’s make soap! First, lye…(ugh, lye soap)
When ur animals inevitably die, you can boil their hooves for glue….
Also, I wonder if they know what poison oak looks like…
Did you know that goats can get polio and pigs can get rickets? If not, u shouldn’t be homesteading….

#2: How do you know so much about homesteading?

#1: I watch a lot of shows about veterinarians in rural areas.
If you have cows, you gotta know the right (and wrong!) way to pull a calf out alive.
Can you properly sterilize and stitch a wound? If not, don’t homestead. Can you set a simple broken bone? If not, don’t homestead.

*whistles nonchalantly off to my appliance-equipped kitchen*

Also if you hire labor, you’d best know your tax law!

*whistles another tune about rabies and tetanus combined*

This song goes, “Would you like to drain an abscess in an animal’s hooooooof?”

DH’s 2006 Honda Civic Hybrid is starting to make unpleasant putt putt putt sounds. It’s possible that the hybrid battery is going to run out in half a year or so (replacement cost: more than the car is currently worth– 2-3K), and the brakes will probably need to be replaced (~$300) sooner rather than later.

When my sister’s Mini-Cooper, bought around the same time as we got our car, committed suicide on the highway in a cloud of dark smoke (after a few months of unpleasant putt putt putt sounds…), we started looking around at new cars as she decided what to get (she ended up with a gently-used 2016 BMW for 29K, though I am not remembering what model– her second choice was a new 2018 Mazda 3 for 25K ). While doing this, we discovered that Honda has a new plug-in Hybrid called the Clarity. This qualifies for the 7.5K federal tax credit, we’re pretty sure. (We will make sure.) DH drove it and decided he liked it very much, except that fancy new cars no longer have spare tires and the trunk is oddly shaped and won’t fit our big cooler that we take when we drive into the city (we do have smaller soft-bodied coolers and could get a smaller hard-bodied cooler). Then he drove the Hyundai Ioniq and the Toyota Prius and decided he did not like them as much at all (we will still probably get a Prius when we swap out my car, although my sister says the new Accents are much nicer than the model we got, so it is tempting to just replace my car with another $15K Accent, even though we can afford a Prius… and I could in theory get an all electric vehicle since my car just tools around town).

It is not cheap. MSRP is $33,400. But there is that $7.5K tax credit that brings is more in line with what we were expecting to pay for a new car for DH. This is also the first year that this model has been available, and there are some small annoying things that reviewers and current owners say about it. Like, they wish there was a knob for the stereo instead of a button (DH doesn’t mind the button– he uses the steering wheel button, but I LIKE the knob as a passenger). They think the middle of the car looks kind of weird (DH doesn’t mind). The lane correction isn’t as good as in other cars that have it. These and probably many other small annoying things will probably be fixed in the 2019 and 2020 models if the Clarity stays in production. It really isn’t like us to buy a first of anything– we generally buy the most popular and tried item that we can afford within the set of what we’re looking for. We got a Honda Civic Hybrid, but not until they’d ironed out the kinks. Of course, by the time the kinks are ironed out, that phat tax incentive is gone.

If/When we do pull the trigger, I’m planning on emailing all the dealers in a 2 hour radius to ask for a walk-away price to see if I can get them to compete. This is the same strategy that I wrote up for a guest post on Get Rich Slowly many years ago. Some dealers are making it harder to find an email, but generally they do provide emails of individual sales people even if they don’t have an easy to find inquiries email anymore.

My work has a free plug-in station for electric vehicles, though over the past year it has started getting actual use meaning one cannot just drive up and plugin anymore. I assume that they will start charging for it eventually (all the other plug-in stations charge!)

We also have to figure out what to do with the Civic. We can’t keep it because we have a 2-car garage and a 1-car driveway and our HOA tows cars that stay on the street overnight. Kelly Blue Book thinks we’ll get something like 2-3K for a trade-in and 1-2K if we sell it. Donating it would probably get $45 (that is not a typo) *if* we itemized, which is unlikely. DH also considered giving it to his relative who is down to one car (as a hobby, his relative’s father likes to drive and pick up and drop off cars and people all over the country without getting anything in exchange), but after thinking it through he realized that giving his relative something that is soon going to need $300 brakes and won’t work without a $2000 battery is probably not a great idea. On top of that, the Civic Hybrid needs a pit to do oil changes and the closest Honda dealer is 40 min away. I feel a little bit guilty about springing all that on whatever unsuspecting college student would end up buying our car as well, though there’s also the chance that the car will be fine for the next few years and DH is too pessimistic, and if things aren’t fine for this hypothetical college student, there’s a dealership in town. Most likely we’ll trade-in and take very little for the trade-in because it’s too hard to negotiate that part. Oh well, we’re not trying to completely optimize money here.

Today has been an extremely busy and extremely crappy week. From big things like having two research projects blow up to smaller things like my single utility stock putting a hold on dividends. And a lot of stuff in between that I can’t even keep in my mind (also far worse stuff happening to other people). Also DC2 has a slight fever and runny nose (but fortunately seems happy on the couch cranking through Geronimo Stiltons). I’m hoping next week has far fewer unpleasant surprises.

The institutional spin proclivities of our main three national newspapers, revealed in one burst of alerts pic.twitter.com/knE7Aghn7w

Watch the moment Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO) tried to pass a bill guaranteeing military pay and death benefits during the gov’t shutdown — and GOP leader Mitch McConnell blocked it pic.twitter.com/RNIdMvvfLx

.@CustomsBorder got on a Greyhound bus yesterday at 4:30pm in Fort Lauderdale and asked every passenger for their papers and to prove citizenship. Proof of citizenship is NOT required to ride a bus! For more information about your rights, call our hotline👉 1-888-600-5762 pic.twitter.com/rWJn61o8VP

Stealing away immigrant’s rights does make fiscal sense if you are one of the lawful evil crooks directly benefiting from stealing their stuff, but it will also increase prices for everyone else. This thread makes fascinating parallels to the causes and consequences of Japanese Internment.

Speaking of no fiscal sense, the new tariffs on solar panels piss me off. On a personal level, I hope that our roof lasts long enough to wait this out. On a human level, I hope that China takes up this opportunity to increase solar technology so the world can save itself sooner. On an American citizen level, I think this is terrible because we’re making it easier for China to become the new hegemon. But maybe we no longer deserve that status anymore. Not that China does at the political point it’s at right now, but perhaps with its new power it will become more of a force for a positive future. :/

opinion on privatizing our nation’s air controllers. I oppose but was told the whole system should be moved to computer based GPS system and then Highways in the Sky for planes could be free form making flights faster and private industry can do this more rapidly than government. (I was in social situation so could not say I have never known a single computer system that did not ‘go down’ or ‘have ‘undocumented features ‘ so how would that work…) The topic of pipelines that ‘will not fail but ALL LEAK at some time’ had already come up.~~ I had been assured I was wrong on that point and ignorantly female. SO, back to air controllers: If this would be profitable for private companies to do why isn’t it done profitably or better by public government?

OMG, the WORST IDEA. OMG OMG OMG.

Well, it’s only the WORST IDEA if you think that airplane passengers are more important than prisoners. If you think prisoners are people too and should have rights, then privatizing prisons is actually the worst idea and this is only second worst. I guess there’s also privatizing foster care systems… if you think all people are equal then that might be slightly above air traffic control but still below prisons in potential harm done by privatization. (Foster care systems empirically aren’t as bad as prison systems, even though the potential is there to be as bad. This has to do with better state oversight.)

I had a section on privatizing public systems in one of my classes last semester and students brought in stuff– if I’d known it would come up as an ask the grumpies I’d have taken a picture of the whiteboard commonalities of when it works and doesn’t that we came up with. It can be ok, but it depends on a lot of stuff and it really shouldn’t be something where you know, people could die.

Ugh, so no, not you being ignorantly female. There’s a reason there’s a role for government for various systems.

We generally think that there is a potential role for government intervention when there is market failure in the competitive markets. One form of market failure comes from monopolies. Something like air-traffic control is what we call a “natural monopoly”– natural monopolies occur when it just doesn’t make sense for more than one company to be in one market. A lot of utilities are in this kind of situation– where it doesn’t make sense for two companies to lay down pipes or what-have-you. (You can also have government-private partnerships, where, for example, the government owns the rail-lines but allows different companies to pay to use them.) Air traffic control is an example of a natural monopoly. At an airport, it makes sense for only one company to do the air-traffic control. Any more could lead to planes, for example, hitting each other.

The government in this situation could still allow private contractors to bid on the ability to be that one company doing all the air traffic controlling. Unfortunately, air traffic control benefits a lot from experience and there are switching costs when an old company leaves and a new one takes its place. Those switching costs could lead to not just inefficiency but also death. Finally, oversight is really important with privatization. Unlike the government, companies can just go out of business when they cut costs so much that people die, so they don’t have as much of an incentive to stay safe when it means cutting into profits. Government can combat that by making it costly for them to cut corners before someone ends up dead, but that oversight comes at a cost. Those costs could be large enough (and the possibility of bribes could be high enough) that it makes sense for the government just to do it itself.

Oven roasting vegetables is surprisingly easy and tasty. Why have I not been doing this all my life?

I accidentally deleted my amazon wishlist and couldn’t bring it back. I was able to recreate the first page (because I had it open in another window), but not the second, which means I lost some Darcy Burke books I wanted (I don’t love all of hers, but some were worth getting) as well as the replacement watch I want to get at some point but not until my current watch stops working. And… I’m not really sure what else. :/ Oh well, if I really really had wanted whatever it was, I would have gotten them by now.

GT pullout for Kindergarten is supposed to start in March with permission and testing in January. But DC2 told us that zie and the other kid in hir “I” level reading group have been going already since before winter break. I think I’m not bothered that the school didn’t mention this to us. And we did fill out the nomination/permission slip for GT testing and got it in early so maybe that counts even though zie hasn’t done testing yet. And I would feel bad for kids if their parents didn’t give permission.

I have gotten so many colds this year. It sucks. :(

It’s the first day of the quarter and the rain is pouring. The phone system is broken indefinitely and the printers/copiers have gone down. The fire alarm isn’t alarming, but it is beeping inconsolably. At least the pipes didn’t freeze and flood my office like those poor professors on the East Coast.

Our compost pile is really the only way to get dirt around here absent of buying it.

Remember how I had the scary dentist experience (newer readers should definitely read this story– it is pretty awful)? Well, it turns out she didn’t even do my crown right– it was too high and that is probably why the top tooth cracked requiring my second crown. My amazing current dentist fixed the old crown when the bite wouldn’t work with the new one. I didn’t realize how bad my bite was during those 6 years, but it seems obvious now that it has been fixed. I wish I’d thought to ask him to check 5.5 years ago when I switched to him– I could have avoided (or at least put off) this second crown! The experience was a lot different too– he spent the time explaining about the architecture of the tooth and what parts to sand down and which tools to use to do it and how to get the angles right and so on. He also discussed the different materials that these crowns are made of and what research says about how they affect mouth muscles while chewing and why he prefers the one he gets for his patients. It was lovely. Or about as lovely as an hour and a half of sanding down and refitting a new crown could be.

DC1 (now age 11, but 10 when zie took the exam) got a 1260 (out of 1600) on the SAT. Not bad for someone who hasn’t quite finished half of Algebra 1.

DC2’s report card came with excited notes that DC2 can count past 100. But… DC2 can do multiple digit addition and subtraction with borrowing and carrying at least two different ways (traditional US and Singapore style) and can do quite a bit of single digit multiplication. I wonder if we should talk to them about math. [Update: We emailed and they said they’d add harder stuff to the math stations, which in practice, according to DC2, seems to be a couple of those puzzle games where you try to match up square cards based on the pictures they have on them.] We also wonder what grade would be best to skip given the dual-language thing and if there are immersion summer programs we could send hir two to bulk up on Spanish if zie does skip a grade. We have until May to decide about grade skipping testing for the year.

It seems like a lot of people have no idea how horrific slavery actually was.

From my uncle: “Mom set up a trust that took all of the DuPont stock Dad accumulated over the years and put it to work in the stock market. It grew, and threw off dividends that she used to buy other stocks and mutual funds. She always said that she hated laziness, and having money as cash, was just having lazy money. It should be invested to grow. So she invested it through the trust.

“This was Mom’s gift to her grandchildren, given in the hope and expectation that they will use the funds wisely, and not let the money be lazy.”

She had 16 grandchildren. “One provision in the trust was she left each of her grandchildren the equivalent of 100 shares of DuPont stock.”

They had to do a little detective work because DuPont doesn’t exist anymore so what happened to the stock. But they figured it out.

It’s not quite enough to open a Vanguard brokerage account and get low fees, but I have been thinking recently that I have too much savings in the bank.

I just (literally today) had a really similar experience to the one this guy is describing. I went out for sushi with DC2 (DH and DC1 are at a robotics meet) and the table next to mine had some stupid (female) bigot complaining about how DEMOCRATS shut down the government because they want to SPEND on immigrants which we can’t afford to do. So many levels of wrong. I hate Fox News. Then a black woman with a Caribbean accent joined them for lunch and she shut up. I wanted to be like, save yourself! But, like Betty in the thread, probably she knows.